Thank you. (Laughs.) Two years ago,
I launched campaign called HeForShe at the UN in New York. I was very nervous
before that speech. The nerves were followed by a tremendous high immediately
afterwards and a crushing low a few days after that. My best hopes and my worst
fears were confirmed all at once. I had opened Pandora’s Box to a standing
ovation and almost simultaneously, a level of critique I had never experienced
in my life and the beginning of what would become a series of threats.

The last two years have been a
baptism of fire, to say the least, where I learned just how little I know and
also how much. It was my scary first step as an activist, a word I never imagined
that I would use to describe myself. So, reading the applications of activists
who apply here for One Young World scholarships was surprising to me. Here I
was, reading the stories of people from nearly 200 different countries from
around the world with experiences that I couldn’t even imagine. I mean, I
really just – they were so out of this world to me. And yet, their notes look
like my notes. The same themes emerged over and over and over again. There was
so much overlap with the things that I had been thinking about and that I had
been struggling with because the truth is, it had never been about being an
activist. It was about the choice to make myself visible and the choices that
you made to do that, too.

Apart from the significant progress
the world has made in the cause for equality, the best thing about the last two
years has been this: finding people from such disparate experiences and
communities that I found that I have something in common with. This is a
community of artists, spiritual teachers, dreamers, thinkers, doers, who work
together and support each other. For the first time in my life, I found my
sisterhood, a brotherhood, whatever, however you want to describe it. I found
my tribe.

My hope for you while you’re here
is that you will find some of your tribe, too. I really needed mine. Bobby
Kennedy, when he was senator for New York said, “Each time, a man or woman
stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lots of others, or strikes out
against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each
other from a million different centers of energy, those ripples build a current
that can sweep down the mightiest wall of oppression and resistance.” That’s
what we are doing. We, the entire spectrum of the feminist movement, are
building an unstoppable current, for which we need ripples of hope from every
age, race, ability, walk of life, from every human experience. I feel gender
equality is as important as any of the other goals that we are here to discuss.
And actually, if anything, it is even more important because it intersects with
every single other issue that we face. We all have feminine and masculine
energies within us.

And both forces need to be lifted
up, respected. They need to work together in order to make the world go round.
Each of you are here at One Young World because you do something important. And
it is so exciting to see you all come together in one room because One Young
World isn’t about saying what I, each of us, individually can do, but what we
can do – working together, supporting, and listening to each other.

It’s in that spirit that I am
delighted to introduce nine activists who are the first recipients of a One
Young World scholarship that I am very honored to have in my name. They are
working to secure real progress towards a gender-equal world, and I hope that
their stories inspire you as much as they have inspired me. In a moment, I am
going to ask them to come onto the stage, but before I do, I want to offer a
few statements of my own that I have struggled with and I continue to struggle
with on a daily basis but that I’ve found inspiring.

I want to ask you to take a moment,
you can keep your eyes closed or keep them open, and ask yourself if these have
any truth for you in them.

I am willing to be seen.

I am willing to speak up.

I am willing to keep going.

I am willing to listen to what
others have to say.

I am willing to go forward even
when I feel alone.

I am willing to go to bed each
night at peace with myself.

I am willing to be my biggest,
bestest, most powerful self.

These seven statements scare the
absolute shit out of me. But I know that they are at the crux of it all. At the
end of the day, and when all is said and done, I know that these are the ways
that I want to have lived my life. I know each one of you probably will have
encountered one of these statements in the last 48 hours, and if you have,
thank you for being here. I appreciate it. It’s truly an honor to be here with
you all.